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Irongate chipset family; early steppings had issues with AGP 2×; drivers often limited support to AGP 1×; later fixed with "super bypass" memory access adjustment. [1] AMD-760 chipset AMD-761 Nov 2000 Athlon, Athlon XP, Duron , Alpha 21264. 133 (FSB) AMD-766, VIA-T82C686B AGP 4×, DDR SDRAM AMD-760MP chipset AMD-762 May 2001 Athlon MP
The X370 chipset supports multiple graphics cards. But the number of available PCIe lanes depends on the CPU/APU. Support for Zen (including Zen+, Zen 2 and Zen 3) based family of CPUs and APUs (Ryzen, Athlon), as well as for some A-Series APUs and Athlon X4 CPUs (Bristol Ridge based on the Excavator microarchitecture)
ASUS Republic of Gamers logo An ASUS promotional model presenting ROG products. ASUS Republic of Gamers (ASUS ROG) is a brand used by ASUS since 2006, encompassing a range of computer hardware, personal computers, peripherals, and accessories. AMD graphics cards were marketed under the Arez brand due to the Nvidia's GeForce Partner Program. [56]
At least one Asus board [which?] is known to have faulty BIOSes with corrupt ACPI IVRS tables; for such cases, under Linux, it is possible to specify custom mappings to override the faulty and/or missing BIOS-provided ones through the use of the ivrs_ioapic and ivrs_hpet kernel parameters.
The Radeon 400 series is a series of graphics processors developed by AMD.These cards were the first to feature the Polaris GPUs, using the new 14 nm [8] FinFET manufacturing process, developed by Samsung Electronics and licensed to GlobalFoundries.
Common features of Ryzen 1000 desktop CPUs: Socket: AM4. All the CPUs support DDR4-2666 in dual-channel mode.; All the CPUs support 24 PCIe 3.0 lanes. 4 of the lanes are reserved as link to the chipset.
Zen 3 is the name for a CPU microarchitecture by AMD, released on November 5, 2020. [2] [3] It is the successor to Zen 2 and uses TSMC's 7 nm process for the chiplets and GlobalFoundries's 14 nm process for the I/O die on the server chips and 12 nm for desktop chips. [4]
The Pentium M represented a new and radical departure for Intel, as it was not a low-power version of the desktop-oriented Pentium 4, but instead a heavily modified version of the Pentium III Tualatin design (itself based on the Pentium II core design, which in turn had been a heavily improved evolution of the Pentium Pro).